DocketNumber: Docket No. 30586-08.
Judges: Wherry, Goeke, Holmes, Colvin, Halpern, Vasquez, Thornton, Paris, Cohen, Gustafson, Morrison, Kroupa
Filed Date: 12/27/2011
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
An order of dismissal for lack of jurisdiction will be entered.
On the basis of a final decision in a partnership-level proceeding for RJT Investments X, LLC, which had made all partnership allocations for its tax year ended Dec. 31, 2001, to P-H, R determined an income tax deficiency and an accuracy-related penalty for Ps' 2001 tax year. Immediately after issuing a notice of deficiency to Ps, R directly assessed the deficiency and penalty amounts determined in that notice. R has since acknowledged errors in these deficiency and penalty amounts and has made corresponding assessment abatements. Nonetheless, R argues that the notice of deficiency is invalid and that the Court lacks jurisdiction over the case because the changes to Ps' 2001 tax liability shown on the notice are computational adjustments that are not subject to deficiency procedures. Ps have conceded the amount of the deficiency but urge us to follow
*221 WHERRY,
Petitioner husband, Randall J. Thompson, engaged in a Son-of-BOSS (BOSS) market linked deposit transaction in 2001, seeking to offset approximately $21,500,000 in capital gains. To facilitate the BOSS transaction, petitioner husband formed RJT Investments X, LLC (RJT), on October 12, 2001. For its tax year ended December 31, 2001, RJT made all partnership allocations to petitioner husband. The Commissioner issued a notice of final partnership administrative adjustment (FPAA) to RJT for 2001 on March 21, 2005, disallowing deductions and losses and determining an accuracy-related *53 penalty under
Petitioner husband, as the tax matters partner of RJT, petitioned this Court challenging the FPAA in a partnership-level proceeding,
Petitioners' 2001 Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, included income, deductions, and losses relating to RJT. In a stipulation of facts filed June 16, 2011, the parties agree that "On September 22, 2008, respondent timely mailed an affected items notice of deficiency for the year ending December 31, 2001, to petitioners determining a deficiency in federal income tax and an addition to tax pursuant *222 to
Petitioners filed a petition on December 19, 2008, before the December 22, 2008, date shown as the "Last Day to File a Petition With the United States Tax Court" on the September 22, 2008, notice of deficiency. On December 2, 2009, respondent filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction (motion), and a memorandum in support of respondent's motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. Pursuant to an order of the Court of December 8, 2009, petitioners timely filed a memorandum in opposition to respondent's motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction on December 31, 2009. Respondent's motion asks that this case be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction upon the ground that no valid statutory notice of deficiency * * * has been sent to petitioners with respect to taxable year 2001,
In reviewing the record in the case, the Court noted two apparent errors by respondent in making adjustments to petitioners' 2001 Form 1040 to give effect to the June 6, 2006, decision in the partnership-level proceeding. The Court brought these apparent errors to the parties' attention.2*56 *57 *58 The *223 parties subsequently filed a stipulation of settlement on July 26, 2011. The stipulation of settlement states in part that
Exhibit B attached to the July 26, 2011, stipulation of settlement, includes a Form 3610, Audit Statement, and a Form 5278, Statement - Income Tax Changes, for petitioners for tax year 2001, each bearing a date of July 18, 2011. The July 18, 2011, Form 3610 shows a "statutory deficiency" of $4,248,420. Line 21 of the July 18, 2011, Form 5278 confirms that the "Deficiency - increase in tax" is $4,248,420. By comparison, on the September 22, 2008, notice of deficiency, the amount shown as "Deficiency" under "Tax" is $4,634,243.3*59
*224 We recognize that the September *60 22, 2008, notice of deficiency contains deficiency and penalty amounts that are larger than the respective amounts that respondent has now stipulated as "correct". Presumably, respondent now believes that the smaller stipulated amounts are the appropriate versions of what he characterized in paragraph 7 of his motion as "computational assessments [that] are authorized by
We consider, in sequence, our jurisdiction over petitioners' income tax deficiency and the accuracy-related penalty.
Whether we have jurisdiction over petitioners' income tax deficiency, in turn, requires us to decide the following three issues: (1) Whether an affected items notice of deficiency issued in the absence of a need for partner-level determinations is void ab initio; (2) whether an erroneous computational adjustment, which both was made and can be corrected without partner-level determinations, constitutes an additional determination rendering valid the notice containing it; and (3) whether any partner-level determinations are required, in petitioners' case, *61 to properly reflect the treatment of partnership items made in the partnership-level proceeding.
We first confront the argument that even though an affected items notice of deficiency may not be required in the *225 absence of a need for partner-level determinations, once the Commissioner does issue such a notice, he is bound by it. If this is correct, then, pursuant to
The applicability or inapplicability of deficiency procedures under
In the absence of a need for partner-level determinations,
We now consider the contention that in making an erroneous computational adjustment, respondent has "made any other determination with respect to petitioners' taxable year 2001 that would confer jurisdiction on this Court."
It may be argued that if an affected items notice of deficiency determines an amount higher than the amount that the Commissioner eventually concedes as the definitive deficiency, then the notice does not properly reflect the treatment of the partnership items at issue.6 Specifically, the argument posits that the acknowledged errors in computing the impact of the treatment of one or more partnership items cause the notice's determination no longer to be a "computational adjustment" under
Supporting this argument is *66 the tenet that the words "properly reflects" in the definition of "computational adjustment" in
In particular, the exclusions from the "no-second-notice" rule of
Any time we redetermine downwards a deficiency shown in an otherwise validly issued affected items notice of deficiency, after making partner-level determinations, we are necessarily holding incorrect the computational adjustment shown on the notice. If the judicially determined error in the *228 computational adjustment is conceived of as "another determination" that the Commissioner has made, then our holding would ipso facto trigger the prohibition against a second notice contained in
We reject such perverse results and the stilted logic that inexorably leads to them. Instead, we hold that the words "properly reflects" *69 in the definition of "computational adjustment" in
For a jurisdictional inquiry, the words "properly reflects" in the definition of "computational adjustment" in
As we explained in
Further, in eschewing to look behind the affected items notice of deficiency, we are being perfectly consistent with our precedent in testing the validity of other "ticket[s] to the tax court",
Our holding is also in accord with
We did *73 not attempt to verify the accuracy of the smaller amount. Instead, we noted that the "inclusion of the additions to tax under
Finally, we note that if we were to hold otherwise, we would allow a taxpayer to proceed with a petition by assigning errors to a notice, even though adjudicating such errors would not require that we make partner-level determinations. Allowing taxpayers such a prepayment forum would circumvent congressional *74 intent as expressed in
The September 22, 2008, notice of deficiency made four discrete computational adjustments to petitioners' 2001 income tax liability, each of which purportedly "properly reflects the *231 treatment under this subchapter of a partnership item".
All of these computational adjustments follow directly from the treatment of partnership items determined in the partnership-level proceeding, and none of them requires any partner-level determinations within the meaning of
We begin with the following unremarkable twin propositions. The validity of each is readily apparent from the relevant Code sections, viewed in the light of the Commissioner's interpretive regulations and the gloss of our own precedent. First, if a TEFRA partnership-level proceeding determines that partnership activities were not engaged in with a profit motive, then for a given tax year a partner's distributive share of partnership income serves as an upper limit on that partner's distributive shares of partnership losses and deductions.11 Second, if the partnership activities were deemed a sham, the partner may not claim a loss on liquidating *77 any part of his partnership interest.
If an "activity is not engaged in for profit",
Though
The two revenue rulings cited above predate TEFRA. However,
We recognize the analytical separability of a partner's intent in investing in the partnership from the partnership's intent in engaging in partnership activities. However: "We have never held that the mere presence of an individual's profit objective will require us to recognize for tax purposes a transaction which lacks economic substance."
For a partner to claim a loss on liquidating his partnership interest, his underlying investment must have been "entered into for profit" within *81 the meaning of
In other words, for an allowable loss on liquidating a partnership interest, each of the following is a necessary condition. The partner must have had a profit motive for investing in the partnership, and the partnership transactions themselves must not be devoid of economic substance. See
Even if the partner had acquired his partnership interest with the individual motive of making a profit, he may not deduct as losses any amounts invested in the partnership if the partnership activities were a sham. See
In the related partnership-level proceeding here, That the formation of RJT Investments X, LLC, the acquisition of any interest in RJT *84 Investments X, LLC by Randall Thompson and any other partner, the purchase of offsetting positions on market-linked deposits, the transfer of offsetting positions on market-linked deposits, the purchase of assets and the distribution of assets had no business purpose, lacked economic substance, and
Because we had concluded in the April 19, 2006, order that a profit motive was absent at the partnership-level, our subsequent decision filed June 6, 2006, disallowed all partnership-level deductions and losses.14*85 That decision also *235 redetermined the partnership income to be zero,15*86 while leaving undisturbed the allocation of all partnership items to petitioner husband.16
Our partnership-level holding that the partnership activities "were not entered into for a profit motive" is sufficient to deny petitioners any distributive shares of partnership deductions and losses on their individual tax return for tax year 2001.17 Also, the partnership-level conclusion that partnership activities "constituted an economic sham" forecloses petitioners from claiming any loss *87 on liquidating a partnership interest in a disregarded partnership.18*88
*236 We arrive at these conclusions without the need for "partner level determinations" within the meaning of
Our June 6, 2006, decision in
After the petition in this case was filed, the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit issued its opinion in
In a supplemental brief, petitioners urge us to heed the Court of Appeals *92 for the D.C. Circuit and hold that "that the penalty determination in a case like this does not relate to an adjustment to a partnership item, rather the penalty determination is a non-partnership item which must be determined with a Subtitle B statutory notice of deficiency."
We withhold comment on how compelling the admonition by the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and the urging by petitioners may otherwise be and merely observe that both arrive too late for this case, where the partnership-level proceeding has already been concluded. Our June 6, 2006, decision in
"A valid jurisdictional judgment has preclusive effect, * * * even if erroneous."
Pursuant to
The Court has considered all of petitioners' and respondent's contentions, arguments, requests, and statements. To *240 the extent not discussed herein, we conclude that they are meritless, moot, or irrelevant.
To reflect the foregoing,
Reviewed by the Court.
COLVIN, HALPERN, VASQUEZ, THORNTON, and PARIS,
COHEN,
GUSTAFSON and MORRISON,
GOEKE,
When faced with similar notices of deficiency issued by the Commissioner to resolve the uncertainty of whether an issue requires partner-level determinations, I submit *102 we should not find such notices of deficiency invalid. We should take jurisdiction to carefully resolve the uncertainty. This is not to say that the majority has not carefully resolved the present case, but the time and effort to address what is determined to be a jurisdictional issue in itself demonstrates the impracticality of the majority's approach.1
I believe we are legally incorrect in the holding that the notice of deficiency in the present case is invalid. The determination of invalidity rests on the restrictions contained in
We should expect this issue to arise in the near future in the context of other complex partnership issues with complex partner-level computations. Have we now made the determination of the correct application of
KROUPA,
HOLMES,
The Commissioner's argument that we lack jurisdiction depends largely on the related partnership case,
After the partnership proceedings, the Commissioner issued a notice of deficiency which made four adjustments: ‡ Eliminating the $206 of dividend income reported on petitioners' 2001 Schedule B, Interest and Ordinary Dividends, as income from RJT's Schedule K-1; ‡ Eliminating the $12,415 capital loss reported on petitioners' 2001 Schedule D, line 5, as a flowthrough loss from RJT's Schedule K-1; ‡ Eliminating the $81,040 investment expense deduction reported on Schedule A, Itemized Deduction, line 22, as a flowthrough deduction from RJT's Schedule K-1; and ‡ Eliminating the reported loss on liquidation of RJT reported on petitioners' 2001 Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses, line 1.
Partnerships don't pay income tax; partners do. This means that there has to be another step after a partnership *107 case is over before the Commissioner can figure out an individual partner's tax bill. The Code calls this a "computational adjustment," which is just the bottom-line "change in the tax liability of a partner which properly reflects the treatment * * * of a partnership item."
Figuring out which adjustments fall into which baskets has proven to be a major legal problem. The Code's test is easy to state: When a computational adjustment is attributable to an affected item2 that requires a determination at the partner level, the Commissioner has to send the partner a notice of deficiency, which gives him a chance to come *108 to Tax Court before paying. See
This makes a blurry line--between "items which require partner level determinations" and items which do not--a blurry line with jurisdictional consequences.3 It's usually not a good idea to make jurisdiction this confusing, and courts have had *109 to make do with what they can to try to make this cranny of the Code as clean as possible.
And that leads to this case. The majority concludes that all of the computational adjustments made in the notice of deficiency that the Commissioner sent to the Thompsons "follow directly from the treatment of partnership items determined *245 in the partnership-level proceeding, and none of them requires any partner-level determinations within the meaning of
I disagree. Remember the list of the four changes the Commissioner wanted to make to the Thompson's tax bill after ‡ Eliminating the $206 of dividend income from RJT's Schedule K-1; ‡ Eliminating the $12,415 capital loss from RJT's Schedule K-1; ‡ Eliminating the $81,040 investment expense deduction from RJT's Schedule K-1; and ‡ Eliminating the reported loss on liquidation of RJT from the Thompson's Schedule D.
The fourth item stands out--why's the Commissioner eliminating an item from the individual partner's tax return when that item doesn't appear on the partnership's own return?
The majority says that we can go ahead and eliminate it anyway because we decided in
Finding the correct (or at least a better) answer, I think, begins with a look at what it was exactly that the Commissioner did after
The problem is that merely zeroing out the Thompsons' outside basis doesn't get the Thompsons their correct tax liability. That's why the Commissioner's computational adjustment was off--he skipped a partner-level step.
The notice of deficiency zeroed out the Thompsons' outside basis by substituting zero for the more than $22 million basis that they had reported, and then increasing their taxable income by $22,006,759 of "Short-Term Capital *113 Gain/Loss." Although the $22,006,759 amount does appear on the Thompsons' return, that was not the amount of the loss that they reported for the disposition of their interest in RJT:
Description of | Sale | Cost or | Gain or | |
Liquidation of | ||||
RJT | 10/12/01 | |||
Investments | $986,759 | $22,006,759 | ($21,020,000) | |
X, LLC | 12/21/01 |
Stipulation of Facts, Exhibit 2-J. As one can see from this exhibit, their claimed loss was $21,020,000. This means that the Commissioner ended up converting the Thompsons' fictional loss into a fictional $986,759 gain.
It's not that the Commissioner had the correct mathematical formula and just made a math error. As we explained in
But in this case, the Commissioner also needed to make another adjustment--either reducing the Thompsons' reported sales price for RJT from $986,759 to zero, or reducing their reported short-term capital gains to zero, or both. Neither the sales price (which, I acknowledge, was nothing more than the return of most of the cash that the Thompsons put into the deal) nor the short-term loss are anywhere to be found on RJT's return.
This becomes a bigger problem after the Courts of Appeals' decisions in
The problem springs from an ambiguity in the phrase "affected items which require partner level determinations." The Code doesn't define "determinations" or "requires", and the majority doesn't try to do it either. But a minute's reflection suggests that there are at least two plausible readings of the phrase. The first is one that construes the phrase to *248 read "affected items which require
A second reading is one that construes the phrase to read "affected items which,
One problem with this reading is that determinations aren't just factual--it's well settled that determinations can be legal, factual, or some combination of both.9
The term "determination" refers to deciding something's nature or outcome. See
I can't say that the majority's reading is without support in our caselaw. It comes from our decision in
In
Look again at what the majority is doing in its opinion--it is making a legal determination that the Thompsons may not claim any loss at the partner level from the liquidation of their partnership interest because we held in
The determination in
The sham determination only indirectly affects the loss reported by the Thompsons for the liquidation of their interest in RJT, and doesn't just flow through to the partners' *251 returns as a numerical adjustment. This is consistent with our holding in
Plus, the Thompsons' loss from the liquidation of their interest doesn't look like the kind of affected item the regulations say can be adjusted without any partner-level determinations. Changes in a partner's tax liability with respect to affected items that do not require partner-level determinations (such as the threshold amount of medical deductions under section 213 that changes as the result of determinations made at the partnership level) are computational adjustments that are directly assessed.
I also think that it's important to consider, when thinking about whether a computational adjustment requires partner-level determinations, whether a partner had the opportunity at the partnership level to dispute all issues of law and fact that will affect the computational adjustment. See
It's true, as the majority points out in note 5, that the Ninth Circuit didn't "reach the question of whether the notice of deficiency would be invalid if no partner-level [factual] determination[s] were necessary."
This case shows us how that might happen--the majority's approach deprives the Thompsons of a prepayment forum to challenge the Commissioner's disallowance of the loss. Maybe that doesn't make a lot of difference in this case--it's hard to see how the Thompsons would care about whether we have jurisdiction because (if we did have jurisdiction) we'd exercise it to disallow their loss and find them collaterally estopped from disputing the penalty at issue.
But taking a case to conference usually means that we think it should be analyzed for its effects on tax law more generally. Our holding today, I suggest, means that in future cases we will need to conduct a case-by-case analysis as to whether a particular taxpayer's reported loss on the liquidation of his partnership interest could be adjusted in a notice of computational adjustment or only in a notice of deficiency. This kind of individualized case processing would, I fear, defeat a major purpose of TEFRA. Congress has always made it clear that "[p]artnership proceedings under rules enacted in TEFRA, must be kept separate [and distinct] from deficiency proceedings *127 involving the partners in their individual capacities." H. Conf. Rept. 105-220, at 677 (1997),
A case-by-case patrolling of the border between affected items that do and don't require partner-level factual determinations only increases the probability that the IRS's bulk-processing *253 employees will make what we will later call a mistake. What happened after
The majority's construction of affected items subject to deficiency proceedings as only those requiring partner-level factual determinations also threatens to cause inconsistent treatment between partners. When we require each partner to litigate the issue of whether computational adjustments require partner-level factual determinations, we risk treating partners of the same partnership differently even in our Court. (And refund courts may also disagree with our characterization of computational adjustments that can be directly assessed.)
A computational adjustment relating to a loss reported by a partner on the liquidation of his interest is just the type of item that should be routed through deficiency procedures because it may require partner-level factual determinations, and will always require a partner-level legal determination. In similar cases there might be factual questions raised by the Commissioner's treatment of, for example, the other *129 components that a partner considered in computing his claimed loss (e.g., the cash or property he received from the disregarded partnership). And in all such cases the computational adjustment for the loss will require a partner-level legal determination on the effects of the partnership-level proceeding. An individual partner's loss on disposition of his partnership interest cannot be determined at the partnership level. We therefore should assert jurisdiction at the partner level, because correctly redetermining the loss will generally require us to answer questions of both law and fact. I believe *254 this is a permissible construction of
The silt we stir today will cloud the cases we plunge into tomorrow. I respectfully dissent.
KROUPA,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (Code), as amended and in effect for the year at issue, 2001, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. The Court uncovered these apparent errors when comparing the June 6, 2006, decision in the partnership-level proceeding and petitioners' Form 1040, on the one hand, with the adjustments shown on Form 886-A, Explanation of Items, attached to the Sept. 22, 2008, notice of deficiency, on the other. One of these adjustments sought to give effect to the holding in the partnership-level decision of June 6, 2006, that "RJT Investments X, LLC is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes." Explaining that "We have adjusted your return in accordance with the Tax Court decision for RJT Investments X, LLC", Form 886-A purports to deny petitioners the entire amount of the short-term capital loss that they had claimed on Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses, on account of "LIQUIDATION OF RJT INVESTMENTS X, LLC". Form 886-A shows a "Per Return" short-term capital loss of $22,006,759 and a corresponding positive "Adjustment" in the same amount. However, the Court observed that petitioners' Schedule D had actually claimed, on line 7, a "Net short-term capital * * * loss" of $21,032,415. The amount of $22,006,759 was, in fact, the claimed "Cost or other basis" of the purported investment in the partnership, shown in column (e) of line 1 of Schedule D.
Another adjustment on Form 886-A sought to give effect to the determination in the partnership-level decision of June 6, 2006, that the appropriate amount of the "Partnership Item" described as "Investment income included in portfolio income" was zero and not $206. The Court noted that this redetermination of the relevant partnership item should have "zeroed out" the $206 amount shown on petitioners' Schedule K-1, Partner's Share of Income, Credits, Deductions, etc., on line 4(b), Ordinary dividends. Nonetheless, if the $206 amount was actually received by petitioner husband, it should arguably still have been shown on petitioners' Schedule B, Interest and Ordinary Dividends, under Part II, Ordinary Dividends. Instead of being denoted "FROM K-1 - RJT INVESTMENTS X, LLC", as petitioners had done, the dividend should have been attributed directly to the underlying security. However, it is unclear whether the partnership-level decision of June 6, 2006, had eliminated the partnership item of $206 of dividend or merely rendered it a nonpartnership item. If the latter, then there should have been no net amount of adjustment to petitioners' Schedule B. But Form 886-A, under "Dividends", zeroed out the $206 amount with a negative adjustment in the same amount, without an accompanying positive adjustment to reflect the nonpartnership character of the item.
3. Also, the July 18, 2011, Form 3610 shows an amount under "§
We note that the deficiency and penalty amounts in the attachments to the July 26, 2011, stipulation of settlement are based on petitioners' revised taxable income that reflects disallowance of a net short-term capital loss of $21,032,415, the actual amount petitioners had claimed on their Schedule D, and not the "Per Return" amount of $22,006,759 shown on Form 886-A. We further note, however, that this revised taxable income still does not account for the $206 dividend amount.
As we explain
4. See the Commissioner's If the IRS issues a notice of deficiency, the statute of limitations is tolled, but only if
5. We note that no Court of Appeals has yet concluded as much. The Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in
6. Petitioners have chosen not to make this argument and declared instead that the computational errors in the affected items notice of deficiency "have no bearing on the Court's jurisdiction in this case." Ironically, petitioners' failure to advance this argument has no bearing on our jurisdictional inquiry. We have an affirmative duty to investigate the extent of our jurisdiction regardless of the parties' submissions. See, e.g.,
7. See
8. In the context of a
We extended these principles of limiting our gaze to a notice's surface to
9. Compare
10. These adjustments necessitated respondent's making the following accompanying changes to petitioners' individual tax liability, which are not deemed to constitute partner-level determinations under
11. This excludes, pursuant to
12. We have concurred with this reasoning and concluded that in a
We find unanimity among the various Courts of Appeals that have considered this issue, which have all held that a
However, we do detect a difference of opinion between at least two Courts of Appeals in how
The preceding suggests that while the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit would consider the disallowance of a deduction under
13. See also
14. We acknowledge that neither our order filed Apr. 19, 2006, nor our decision filed June 6, 2006, in
15. See
16. "A court with which a petition is filed in accordance with this section shall have jurisdiction to determine all partnership items of the partnership for the partnership taxable year to which the notice of final partnership administrative adjustment relates, [and]
17. This case, absent a stipulation of the parties to the contrary, is appealable to the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, which does not appear to have decided whether deductions may be disallowed directly under
18. Our Apr. 19, 2006, order granting respondent's motion for summary judgment may be construed as determining at the partnership level, and as a partnership item, the absence of a profit motive in "the acquisition of any interest in RJT Investments X, LLC by Randall Thompson". That order has now become "final" within the meaning of
However, even if we assume that applying
Moreover, a partnership-level conclusion that the partnership "is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes", while leaving unchanged the allocation of all partnership items to petitioner husband, effectively reduces the purported partnership to a "single-member disregarded entity". Cf.
19. See
20. We are mindful that respondent has not spelled out the arguments that we have developed and relied upon to demonstrate the absence of a need for partner-level determinations. We are equally mindful, however, that we are engaged in exploring the outer limits of our subject matter jurisdiction. In conducting this exercise, we would be derelict in our duty if we were to rest solely on the parties' submissions. See
21. In
22. "Under collateral estoppel, once an issue is
Privity for invoking collateral estoppel is supplied by
23. Collateral estoppel is usually invoked as an affirmative defense. Under
More importantly, insisting that the Commissioner affirmatively plead collateral estoppel in every TEFRA partner-level action is an unworkable rule. It would necessitate that we assert jurisdiction even if only to preclude relitigating partnership items. This would defeat, by procedure, clearly enunciated legislative intent of attaining speed and symmetry at the partner level.
TEFRA represents in large part the codification of the collateral estoppel doctrine in the partnership context. See generally
24. We note a potential ambiguity in the parenthetical phrase "other than penalties, additions to tax, and additional amounts that relate to adjustments to partnership items" at the end of
Because the statutory language is ambiguous, we turn to the regulations for guidance. See
The governing regulation for petitioners' tax year at issue, 2001, is
The word "may" retains the notion of a choice on the Commissioner's part. However, in its context in the regulation, following immediately after a clause that unambiguously rejects the applicability of deficiency procedures to a penalty, "may" seems to denote a different choice--not a choice between directly assessing a penalty and subjecting it to deficiency procedures, but instead a choice between directly assessing the penalty and not assessing it at all. The implication appears to be that the Commissioner may elect not to assess a penalty against a given taxpayer partner, and allow this partner to go penalty free, despite successfully defending the asserted penalty at the partnership level.
If the regulation governs, any affected items notice of deficiency showing a penalty relating to an adjustment to a partnership item is invalid. Despite having issued such a notice, the Commissioner can proceed with a direct assessment and collection of the penalty, limiting the taxpayer partner's recourse to a suit or claim for refund. See
1. Petitioners filed their petition on Dec. 19, 2008. Respondent filed his motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction 1 year later on Dec. 2, 2009. After extended briefing and consideration, we are deciding on Dec. 27, 2011, that we lack jurisdiction.↩
2. As the majority writes in citing and quoting extensively from
1. Although the Eighth Circuit affirmed our decision, it nowhere discussed whether we were right to hold that outside basis is a partnership item. See
2. Affected items aren't partnership items but are affected by partnership items. See
3. The matter is profoundly ambiguous, and the Secretary should not view our Opinion as foreclosing the possibility that he could clear this area up much more efficiently through regulation than the Commissioner has been able to do through litigation. As we pointed out in
4. Or to put it in more sophisticated language, the consequence of determining a partnership to be a sham is to say that the rules of subchapter K don't apply. This means we disregard the partnership as an entity separate from its partners, and treat the assets of the disregarded partnership as if they were owned directly by the purported partners.
5. Since the Eighth Circuit's decision in
6. Although I do not believe--certainly after two circuits have both ruled the same way--that we had jurisdiction over outside basis at the partnership level, the Thompsons are collaterally estopped from attacking our contrary decision in their case.↩
7. See
8. Words in a statute generally must be interpreted according to their ordinary, everyday meaning. See, e.g.,
9. See, e.g.,
10. See also
11. Before the 1997 amendments, TEFRA provided for the determination of all penalties at the partner level. See
12. The example we gave in
13. By way of analogy: Where a taxpayer has previously been convicted of a crime involving tax fraud, such as criminal tax evasion under
14. In footnote 18, the majority concludes: "[E]ven if we assume that applying
15.
16. Once the Commissioner assesses a tax, he is allowed to collect any unpaid portion of it by filing liens against, and levying on, a taxpayer's property. The Code allows taxpayers a collection due process hearing before the IRS can use a lien or levy to collect the unpaid taxes. See
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